REFERENCE MATERIAL USED: Curtis, Diane. "Building Online Learning Communities: A worldwide audience may be the motivation students need to succeed." I.E.: Interactive Educator magazine. SMART Technologies. Vol. 2, No. 2, Autumn 2006. Hardcopy, page23.
Find it online to read and judge for yourself here, in PDF format.
Enter page number 23 at the top, search the PDF, or scroll down until you find it. (You will need a PDF reader, such as the one provided to the public by Adobe Acrobat. If you do not already have a PDF reader installed on your computer, the latest version of Adobe Acrobat Reader, version 9.1, can be downloaded for free here.)
History, like most relevant disciplines, has many practical applications in other disciplines. History is particularly relevant in integrated technology, and I'm not talking about simply studying the days when computers filled rooms and spilled out into hallways, today's eighth-grade maths was the greatest usage for them, and "debugging" a computer meant getting out a flyswatter and killing some giant moths in-between the foot-across wires. Instead, I find it interesting how far we've come- exactly how "integrated" today's modern world is, especially in the modernist classroom.
Diane Curtis's article in I.E. magazine for Autumn 2006 (see above for full reference information) highlights the use of current- if not cutting-edge- technology in the American classroom, to study everything from English to the maths, from history itself to the modern-day sciences. Curtis also examines the positives and negatives of said use.
There are many positives, she contends. With the rising job turnover, today's students will likely hold "ten or more jobs" in tomorrow's workforce. Being able to interact with technology and teach themselves new concepts easily will be a plus. "Self-directed learning", a education experience wherein students as individuals and classrooms as wholes develop a basic curricula, with minimal input from teachers other than the essential directive, guides this process of self-taught instruction, while keeping students on-track to success.
International exposure, exposing students to the wider audiences of that technology makes available, encourages them to do better work in the first place and think more about what they are doing. Students, Curtis and other involved educators say, tend to think more about what they are writing when it's for more than just their teachers' eyes.
Teachers have begun to use such diverse technological tools as blogs, e-mail, MeneMAC (a program that creates a integrated "school-within-a-school"), chat rooms, podcasts, websites, videoconferencing and Blackboard (an online discussion forum).
However, the educators involved in such programs are also aware of their drawbacks, contends Curtis. Educators must be aware of the content of these programs before committing to them. The content must add to the direction of the class, not detract from it.
Also, a major concern is, as always, security. A program used in such a way must- with great certainty on all parts- be secure, not only for the students. It must be safe enough for teachers, other students, the school and the parents to trust in it.
A third concern for many teachers is the cohesion or lack thereof of the student body, and therefore the classroom in question. Students, they claim, must be a cohesive and coherent whole in the real world before venturing into the virtual one, or the communication of the program among the online community may be lost, as well.
However, says Curtis, the positives of the situation of integrated technology in the modern classrooms of America certainly outweigh the negatives of the situation, if and when said technology in question is used properly.
What is your opinion on integrated technology in the modern, American classroom? Do you agree with Curtis, or disagree? Why do you believe that?
L.P.

This kinda reminds me of our school. We have internet and we have blogs, as you can see, but we are monitored. And so are most of the students. Now some teachers have the ability to get pass the blockers with passwords but us students can not. History has changed through out time to. Back in the day they didnt have computers. Let alone myspace, blogs, facebook, twitter or anything. And if you would happen to go back farther the people in the world werent allowed to know how to read or write. Technology does have a big part on our school life today.
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